Bluefog is a tool that can generate an essentially unlimited number of phantom Bluetooth devices. It can be used to test Bluetooth scanning and monitoring systems, make it more difficult for attackers to lock onto your devices, or otherwise complicate the normal operation of Bluetooth devices. Technically, Bluefog can work with just one Bluetooth adapter, but it works much better when you connect multiple adapters. Up to four radios are currently supported simultaneously.

Bluelog is a Bluetooth site survey tool, designed to tell you how many discoverable devices there are in an area as quickly as possible. Bluelog differs from most Bluetooth scanners in that it prioritizes speed of reporting over anything else (i.e. it doesn't spend time trying to pull detailed data from a device) and doesn't require any user intervention to function. As the name implies, its primary function is to log discovered devices to file rather than to be used interactively. Bluelog could run on a system unattended for long periods of time to collect data. In addition to basic scanning, Bluelog also has a unique feature called "Bluelog Live", which puts results in a constantly updating Web page which you can serve with your HTTP daemon of choice.

NetSpot is a simple and accessible wireless survey tool. It allows you to collect, visualize, and analyze Wi-Fi data using any MacBook. NetSpot can visualize your wireless network by building a visual Wi-Fi map. It will let you see dead zones without coverage and place hotspots (access points) correctly. Using the visualized map of collected wireless data, you will also see channels' load and will be able to decide how to optimize your Wi-Fi site better. NetSpot is a powerful analyzer of Wi-Fi coverage. It will gather all the information needed for analyzing radio signal leakages, for discovering noise sources, for locating effective access points, etc. You can also use NetSpot as a powerful wireless network planning tool.

OsmoSGSN (Serving GPRS Support Node) is the central core network node of a GPRS/EDGE/UMTS cellular network. It is an experimental SGSN implementation, exposing a Gb interface (NS/BSSGP) towards the BSS and the GTP protocol towards the GGSN. It is not yet ready for production use, but primarily for laboratory and research use.

SIMtrace sniffs communication between a mobile phone and a SIM/USIM card. This can be useful for research and analysis, and for developing mobile phone and SIM toolkit (STK) software. The SIMtrace hardware is also capable of MITM (man in the middle) attacks on the SIM-MS communication.

Spectools provides spectrum analyzer userspace drivers and a GUI for the Metageek Wi-Spy line of USB spectrum analyzers. It's compatible with the Classic, DBi, DBx, 24, and 900mhz models, and capable of inter-operating with the official Windows software via network capture.

W-Meter is a tool for testing the conformance and evaluating the performance of 802.11 products. The tool is meant for injecting arbitrary frames to test the conformance of any wifi product. The tool has templates for generating various kinds of frames which can be customized for generation of specific frames. The tool can be used to elicit responses from other wifi cards to check the conformance of the card to the protocol. At present, 802.11g frames are completed.

WiFiDB is a set of scripts that is intended to manage wireless access points found with the Vistumbler wireless scanning software. WiFiDB also has support for importing Netsumlber summary files and Wardrive for Android database files. WiFiDB can also export access points with GPS to a Google Earth KML file, so you can see where the access points are located.